12 Gorgeous Asian Eye Makeup Looks

The perfect-for-a-night-out lookWhy it works: Since Kelly Hu has a thin- to medium-thick lid with double eyelids, the warm, smoky eye is perfect for her and her tan skin tone. Because her eyes are also wide-set, "the brown is [applied] closer to the inner corners, counterbalancing the wideness," says Babaian.

Who should do it: "Only somebody that has a crease should do this. This look is not for monolids."

It's hard to find a good article on Asian eye make-up, so I really appreciate this. The last two looks are my favorite. However, when I returned to Total Beauty to find this article, I couldn't get past the first page. The new search has been tripping me up in other ways too. I ended up using Google to locate this and other Total Beauty articles.

This is a great article, but I would of liked some more variety in the asian looks. I am asian, also I am fair skin, i wish there were more suggestions for asians with fair skin because I feel like it is hard to use colors on my skin tone. These looks are very pretty, and I feel like this article was very helpful. I do hope for more articles relating to Asian Americans. Thank you very much Sharon!~

I loved this article, and I think it provides great tips for Asian Americans. Personally, I'm going to be trying some of these. I think the only way that this article can be construed as racist is if you consider all makeup misogynist - after all, makeup is meant to enhance the way a woman looks, to make her conform more to accepted standards of beauty.

To the previous poster: I'm absolutely aware of Asians being racist towards their own race. I have seen it before. I don't understand it. Asians are fantastic, beautiful, wonderful, hard working, super intelligent, strong willed, kind, well mannered, determined, confident, outstanding members of society and if I were Asian, I would feel blessed. I don't see why everyone doesn't like them as much as I do.

Whether or not it was written by an Asian is moot. People can be discriminatory toward their own race. Ever heard of the "brown paper bag test?" The question is whether it's disrespectful or offensive toward Asians, which I think this article should be. It's describing Asian eyes as problematic/undesirable/flawed/etc. and suggests that making them less Asian or non-Asian (i.e. faux-creasing, bletharoplasty) would make them better. Perhaps another problem is that this author views non-Asian eyes as "normal" and Asian eyes as "abnormal," because instead of trying to work with or enhance the natural shape of the eye, they are suggesting that destroying what makes it Asian is an improvement.

To Grimm: The reason why I found this at least a liiiitle bit racist, is "The monolid is to blame". monolid....in other words, Asian people's eye shape. I am someone who has TONS of respect for the Asian community. I'm only looking out for them.